This is the OTP presented by farm Burea Health Plans. Look to the folks at farm Herea Health Plans when you need someone who understands the xs and ohs of healthcare coverage. They've been protecting Tennessee and since nineteen forty seven. My name is Mike Keith amy Wells is here as usual in amy Wells. I am so glad that we waited until the afternoon of Friday, August the seventh before recording this edition of the OTP, because there is definitive news.
And when you have definitive news, who do you need to have on the OTP, Amy Wells? Jim Wyatt of course, Jim Wyatt, Tennessee Titans dot Com Senior writer editor. Let's talk Vic Beasley. Let's delve into this right away. First response to his reporting, Jim Relief, Yeah, I think so. I mean it, really you just want to have any distractions out of the way. You want to have this team all together and doing everything a ken to prepare
for the season. And that was going to be a storyline and a topic of conversation until he showed up. So fact, he has started the process of the COVID testing and now you have to go through protocols like everybody else, to be in a physician, to be on the field this time next week. And you know, just to hear some of his teammates on the conference calls today, whether it's Kenny Vaccaro or Roger Sifold, you know they're
they're glad to have him on board. And that's what the that's what this team signed him for him here was a big free agent acquisition. Still has some pop in his game and now it's the process of getting on the field and getting the best the team can get out of him. And the bottom line. Jim touched on some of the timing. Amy he comes in today, takes a COVID test, he will come in tomorrow and
take a COVID test. He will come in on Monday and take a COVID test, and if he is cleared through those three tests, three negative tests, then he can join the football team on Tuesday. Tuesday is when the next phase of this unusual preseason training camp, summer camp, whatever you want to call it, starts. And so, I mean, he hasn't missed a whole lot. I guess that's the best news, right, Yeah, he hasn't really it's we're starting to transition into the more OTA like things, if that
makes sense. So it's not just the meetings and getting familiar with the protocols and all of that. We're working more towards more football, if that makes sense. We're adding more football to the equation. So in terms of whether or not he will be behind, I don't really think that'll be an issue. Vic Beasley's a veteran and Kenny Vaccaro said during his media availability a little bit earlier today that he's not judging anybody for any decisions that
they make throughout this process in twenty twenty. He's saying, you know what, I don't know this guy's life. I'm not sure what was going on. I don't hold anything against him. We're all trying to make the best decisions for ourselves and our families right now. I don't know what's been going on in his world, so we're all starting with a clean slate, and I thought that that was a really good kind of way for him to see the bigger picture of what's been going on with
all of this. Everyone's just trying to make the decisions that are best for them in their families right now. And trying to wade through very bizarre time. So if he can come in, obviously test negative all the times he needs to, and then rejoin the team, he's not going to be that far behind. He's a veteran player. I mean, football is football, you know. And Amy touched on it, Jim about Kenny's comments, and a couple of
other guys were asked about Vic Beasley too. Players don't generally judge other players in instances like this because they all know at some point that could be them, right, That's very true. I mean, covering this team, you know, as long as I have, I've pretty much seen it all. You know, whether it's a guy you know showing up late, like Samari Roll way back in the day. I remember he was dealing with the contract situation. He was late.
You've had other players who have had pretty public bitles with the team, and players don't get into the middle of all that. Again, the Beasley situation, I didn't have anything to do with the contract, but obviously there's something going on that kept Vic Beasley from being here. And I don't think anybody wants to be quick. I don't think anybody wants to jump out and condemn him or put him down. You know, the most important thing is
to get him here working out with his teammates. People forget about those things, and I think fans will forget about it, you know, as long as he comes in does what he's supposed to do, you know, and it's productive on the field. That's what this team signed him for to get out of the quarterback. And I do think that, yes, he missed some time or early that and you'd like to see everybody in at the same time. But the on field work doesn't start unto the end
of next week. There's plenty of time for him to get himself in good shape, plenty of time for him to get comfortable with what they're going to ask him to do. And this is not a first second year Guy's a guy who's done it for a while, and I expect him to be able to hit the ground running. Oh, he's gonna pay his price fine wise, I mean, that's that's between he and the collective bargaining agreement and whatever
goes with that, and so that's that's another story. But as long as he goes and hits the quarterback a bunch in Denver on September fourteenth, and hits the quarterback on September twentieth against Jacksonville, and it hits the quarterback in Minnesota and September twenty seventh, all will be forgiven.
I agree. I mean, I think it's so important. I mean, it's obviously important to have a guy that you kind of earmark and went after a free agy to have him show up, because you know, I think today he's
the team's biggest free agent acquisition. But you know, while he was not here and there were questions about what and he was going to be here, I thought about guys like Harold Landry, and I thought about Camelot Karea, and I thought about you know, Derek Roberson and DeAndre Walker and all these guys who were gonna have to step up without him, And I thought, you know, all this talk about trying to reduce Harold Landry's workloads and snaps, you know you're not gonna able to do that if
you're thin at that position, and and so so Beasley being back, being a part of the group helps everybody. I mean, it takes pressure off a Landry, it takes pressure off Karea, and you just didn't want to have anybody kind of scrambling for more answers or looking for more options with what's left in the market, because you want your own guy in here, the guy you went after to get. You know, that was so interesting, the landry piece that was written. And I was shocked at
how many snaps he played in the playoff game. I guess it was Baltimore that he played all but two snaps. I mean that I had no idea he was on the field that much, and so it's kind of no wonder he wore down and Shane Bowen has talked about it extensively. Amy, did that surprise you did? I mean, you're down on the field. I know you probably don't count snaps, but I had no idea he played that much. Yeah. I mean, looking back on it, you kind of think weo, Yeah,
that kind of makes sense. I mean, he was on the field a lot. But when the actual numbers came out in the percentage of the snaps that he played, it was like, oh, yeah, that is kind of a lot. And when he was asked about it and whether he wants I guess less snaps or something. I mean, what's any guy gonna say? No? Like he wanted to be
out on the field right. He was happy to do it, and his whole thing was building his endurance so that when he's asked to do that again, he can still perform the same level and there's not a drop off even if you're getting tired. But I mean, for a guy playing that many snaps, of course you're gonna get tired. You're a human being. Were you surprised, Jim, I didn't realize that many I knew was planning, I didn't. I didn't realize the significance there. And uh, you know, obviously
he's not wanting to make excuses. I'll say this. His stack numbers went down, but he was still getting after his quarterback pressure. Still, he was still disrupting plays even though he didn't have the stacks that he had during the first part of the season. One other thing I thought was interesting that he said, because I think I think everybody's looking for pass rushers to develop more moves, and he's talked himself about one to add more to
his pass rush arsenal. But you know, you know, he said, hey, I'm not looking to have, you know, a thousand moves. I'm looking to perfect the two or three that I have to be as good as I possibly can at those and he figures that's a way he can be successful. I thought that was an interesting approach that he's taken, and I think that's, you know, it's a smart move.
I mean, if he can be as good as he can possibly be with some of the moves that he feels or his strengths, then that's gonna go along way. He has that bicycle lean that the birthday boy Dave McGinnis Happy birthday, Coach Mac. He has that bicycle lean that Coach Mack talks about Amy and Vic Beasley has it too, and they are those kind of rushers. Roberson has that Krey is a stiffer, more power rusher. That's okay,
that works as well. But you love having some of those guys who really put pressure on those tackles on the edge. Landry Roberson a guy, a guy like Vic Beasley, who I mean, listen, if you've put up fifteen and a half sacks in a season at some point, which he has, you can rush the passer. You know you don't do that by accident. I'm gonna be honest with you, Mike. I don't care what kind of moves you have I don't care if you're running, walking, crawling. However, you get
there and get the man on the ground. That's what I'm interested in. How you get there. If you're skipping or spinning or none of that matters to me. Just get there. But speed rush is a big deal in a three to four. You've got to have power guys, but you've also got to have speed guys so that you can get there when you're only sending four people.
You can't blitz all the time. You just can't. Jim, I agree, And I do think this team's obviously better in my mind than it was last season from an edge rush, pass rush standpoint, a team that went to LFC Championship game last year. So I think Beasley, if he gets in here, get some self ready to go and plays, you know, like he's capable playing. I think you can see him improved Harold Lander this year. I really like the way kaya finish the year last year.
And then you just get really one of the other two Walker and Robson to step up and help you, and both of them could. I mean, I think you'll use a lot of guys in rotation. When I look at the defense, I think the edge Rush has a potential beat even better than the last season. You know, the guy we don't talk about enough in that is Gilbert because Gilbert comes over from Green Bay. He's coming back from an injury. He did some good things at
different points. But I know Shane Bowen's been talking about the fact that him being healthier, he may be able to give more this year. Jim, Yeah, and I probably should have mentioned him in that group because he is you know, they thought enough of him to bring him back for another year, and he has some experience. You know, he dealt with an injury when he first came to Tennessee. He kind of battled through that. He's a hard working guy.
So when you talk about rotation, when you talk about guys competing, he's very much in the mix there and really anxious to see how some of these guys look, you know, especially Gilbert, Robertson and Walker. When camp starts, all right, Amy, let me ask you a question. Go put you on the spot just a little bit. Do you think that in twenty nineteen the most improved tighten from twenty eighteen was Harold Landry? Was he the most
improved player from the year before? Probably I would put Harold Landry and Rashaun Evans kind of on a similar line there, although Rashaun Evans was playing great at the end of twenty eighteen. Yeah, but I still think that he was more consistent in twenty nineteen and he was more effective in twenty nineteen. All Right, that's fair. Who will be the most improved Titan in twenty twenty? Maybe you can go first, and then I'm gonna let Jim go,
and then I've got one. Well can I pull one that it's kind of a cop out answer, Well, yeah, sure, what have you won? Okay? I think Jeffrey Simmons, because he's going to have a full year, have a full offseason, have a working leg. I mean, he's already leaps and bounds above where he was at this point a year ago. So I think that, just by a productivity standpoint and not having so many cards stacked against him, I think
Jeffrey Simmons is my guy. So we've already done something with Jeffrey Simmons for TV and I asked him the question, I said, where is your knee braves? Yeah, he does not know where it is. He doesn't know where it is. I don't know where it is. I happy because I thought maybe he burned it or he was going to auction it off for charity. But he said, you know the truth is, I don't even know where it is. I said, that's the best answer you could have given me.
That makes me happy. That means it's not even in his mind. In his mind, Jim Wyatt, all right, So I'm gonna give it to you. Who is going to end up being the most improved Titan in twenty twenty. Well, I'm going with A J. Brown. And people say that's crazy because this had a thousand yards receiving last year and eight touchdowns and you know, he already looked like he was NFL ready last year. But I think that just kind of was to tip the iceberg for him
about how good he can be. He can better those numbers and then some because I think he's going to be that much better from you know, a technique standpoint, from a knowing what defenses are trying to do to him.
You know, it lit a fire underneath them. The fact that he didn't have some success late in the season and some of those games that he did early in the year, and I think he's motivated to show that he can be a tremendous pro and you know, felt the perceived snub from being third in offensive Rookie of the Year. I think has been on his mind as well. So I think A. J. Brown takes it up another notch in twenty and twenty and is uh, you know, becomes a Pro Bowl caliber receiver. Maybe Wells. Who is
Mike Keith gonna say? I don't know. I'm sitting here looking at my roster trying to figure out who you're gonna say, someone goofy. I've got no say. Who am I going to say? He's gonna say a Moni hooker? No? Actually no, although I thought about that, I think it's Adam Humphries. I wouldn't h And it's not fair to say he played poorly because he didn't. I just think he never got on the same page with Mariota because Mariota was, you know, let's face it, markets in the
same book. No, he wasn't playing that well. And then he finally gets Tannehill in there and it looks like they're gonna establish some rhythm and he gets hurt. I think we will see the Adam Humphreys from twenty eighteen in Tampa with the Tennessee Titans in twenty twenty. I think you're talking about a guy. I think he leads the team in catches and I'm not saying he leads the team in yards. I think he leads the team in catches. Reaction response, I'm here for it. I think
that's great. I was excited when we signed him last year. I was disappointed that he didn't get off to the start that I think we all, including himself, wanted him too. Sure, So I'm I'm okay with that, Mike, Like, if he's the most improved Titan, that would make me very happy. And I think that our why receiver room would be pretty pretty solid if Adam Humphries has the season that we're all expecting him to have. You spent some time
with him, didn't you, Jim. I did. Yeah. There's actually a story on Tennessee Titans dot com about Adam Humphries that was posted this morning, so good timing on that. And he's excited. I mean, I think he felt, like, you know, he would make more of an impact at times last season, and just the transition and getting comfortable in a new offense and with new quarterbacks. That off
obviously was an adjustment for him. There was a stretch there in the middle of the season where he was having games where he caught four or five passes and he felt good, and then he had the ankle injury in Indianapolis and missed six games, including the two playoff games. You know, he feels like the team having tanney Hill back, the team having so much continuity on offense, that's going to go a long ways. And you know, he's comfortable
in Tennessee. You know, in Tampa he talked about, you know, living in an apartment with two of his teammates his entire time there, and now he's bought his own place here in Tennessee. Again, he's fired up by tanney Hill. He did a lot of work this saw season to get himself ready to go. And I think that's a good kind of breakout candidate because you look at his numbers and they don't jump off the page at you.
But you got to consider that he did miss a significant stretch and he was adjusting the different quarterbacks like everybody else. So he's a good candidate to make a huge jump in my mind as well. All right, telling me ask you this we're at August seventh. The Titans had one player opt out, Anthony McKinney, an undrafted rookie offensive lineman who quite frankly, was going to be hard pressed to make this roster, and so the Titans current roster was not affected by the opt out thing to
a big degree. Now they're in a situation where Vick Beasley is back, Jayon Brown has been activated from pup. He's back to work or ready to start work as they get deeper into things, waiting on Corey Davis at this point, he's still on the pup. So things have settled down a little bit. Jim, I'm gonna give you first cracking the namy. You go with some cap money. Does John Robinson, now that he's got some things sorted out,
does he start to make a few moves? Now? Is this where he starts to kick some tires and light some fires and bring some free agents? And I know everybody's gonna assume this is a Jadevian clowney comment, not just saying that maybe he does, maybe he doesn't. But do we see business start to pick up for Titans
as far as free agents, no matter who that may be. Well, I guess with John nothing surprises me because he is aggressive and he does you know, he does surprise people from time to time on some of the bold moves
that he makes Personally. I mean, I kind of get the hunch that because he's waited so long this offseason ootas and many camps and really an offseason program, I just think he's chomping at the bit to see his own guys, and I think he's going to give those players a long look during the early portion of camp to kind of gauge what he has exactly, and if he doesn't like what he has after a couple of weeks or it feels like the team needs to upgrade
at certain positions, I kind of think that's when he jumps out and makes a move, you know, at certain spots. I thought it was interesting when the team cut down, you know, got us roster down to eighty, that the team parted ways with players that had some experience, not the undrafted guys that probably some people expected. And the reason the team did that because they want to look at these undrafted guys and then at that point they feel like the guys that they released initially are going
to be better options. Then you'll bring those guys back. But I think this is the time now, whether it's with Logan Woodside or whether it's with some of the rookies who are gonna be buying for spots. I think you got to give those guys a shot, and then I think you kind of jump in and add to the roster because we still have time. I mean, the seasons still over a month from now. Some of these veterans you'd be bringing in, maybe they don't need the
camp as much as some other guys do. So I'm over the feeling that he's going to wait a little bit, look at what he has, and then decide to make
some moves. I think you also have to consider the financial aspect of this, and Mike you had mentioned that, you know, we still have some cap room and money to work with, and I think that John Robinson is going to be a little bit more I don't know if frugal is the right word, but he's going to be a little bit more aware of socking away some extra money for the season than maybe we would see in other situations. Because we don't know what this season
is going to look like. There's a chance that there could be a lot of turnover on a roster, and you've got to have money to pay people to play for you. So it wouldn't surprise me if everyone kind of sits on this team that we have for a while, really evaluate the guys that are in the building, see what we can put together, and then make some tough
decisions from there. But I don't think you're going to see any big just blow them out of the water, big surprise moves until after training camp is over, and John Robinson may look at this roster and say, Okay,
we need to fill in some pieces. But I think he's going to hang on to more money than he typically would because we don't know what's going to happen with this roster, and we don't know how many holes he's going to have to fill as this virus kind of moves through cities and locker rooms and whatever else may happen this season. That's a great point because there's so much talk about with the cap going down next year, Jim, people are holding on to money and moving it to
next year. But Amy's right, if you keep five million in reserve to get through a season in a normal year, you may need eight to ten million this year to get through it because you you just don't know what it's going to end up looking like, you just don't
have any idea. Yeah, and I think I think the teams and I saw the updated list, you know, just the other day, and I think the teams that have a little bit of money to work with probably sleep a little bit better than night sure because of that issue, because you don't know what's going to happen, like Amy said, during the course of the season. So we'll see what transpires, I mean, and again I think he'll probably get a better picture of what he has and where this team
may need to add some some pieces. But you also got to consider a whole other group of players is going to be available for you once roster cuts are made, you know, at the end of camps and into September, and you know, maybe you wait and to get a guy who's gone through camp, whose body is in shape, is not gonna have to come in and go through a testing system and protocols that we put them behind the eight ball. When you're getting closer to the season,
maybe you're better off waiting identifying some of those guys. Unfortunately, thing is without the preseason without the benefit of having some of these in joint practices. You haven't been able to see some of these guys up close, so you're really doing some of this stuff blindly, which is completely different than years past. Yeah, it's a it's a totally
different situation one hundred percent. And I think everybody understands that that's going to be you know, how it all goes down now that what's going to happen at this point is eighty players will go out through the eleventh in what is a conditioning period? Am I saying that right? Amy? An acclamation period? I guess is how you better say it? And then the twelfth through the sixteenth that's gonna sort of look like Phase two of OTA with helmets and
do I have that right? Yeah? It sounds like limited field work whatever that means. So, I mean that typically is a lot of kind of individual position work. You're wearing helmets, maybe you're wearing shells, but you're not going up against people, you're not putting your hands on guys in other positions. Typically, that's what that means. I mean,
I didn't write it, so I don't really know. But so the transition comes on August seventeenth though, right, Jim, that's the day when you're allowed to start putting pads on for the first time and have you know, contact, And I mean this is also new to all of us because we are used to guys reporting and then being on the field the next day and a couple of days in you're having goal line drills and you're having eleven on eleven and doing things from a completely
different standpoint as far as intensity goes. You know, as ask Bribal, you know this week during a video converence, College is kind of to walk me through what phase we're in, expecting him to say, well, we're in phase two, and he said, well, the rookies are in phase seven. And I'm like, well, you know what will happen in phase three, four, five, and six. I mean, there's all this terminology and where they are so different than where
it's been in years past. And it has been a slow lead in that has involved testing and walked through and meetings and conditioning and a lot of work that's been done before you even think about getting on the football field. I think we're all excited about being out there next Friday to watch, but it's still gonna be a little while before we're really able to evaluate guys and seeing competitive drills. Jim, you have not watched this team do anything yet, by rule, and yet you're still
writing tons of stuff at Tennessee Titans dot Com. You're still on Twitter throwing things out all the time. How are you covering this team and this quote unquote training camp without being able to see any of it. I
have stock pilots. I've talked to a lot of guys, like at the Adam Humphreys story that I wrote for this morning, I talked to him, you know, a couple of weeks prior, and there are a couple of guys I've talked to just to really make sure leading up to camp, I had enough stuff to get me to camp. And then it turns out that camp is not camp as we know it. I have some stuff, some features
that I still have kind of held on too. I got to do position previews and usually roll those out and the two weeks leading up to camp, and again I had to put pauls on those, you know, partly because of the long build up to camp, and also because I didn't want to put a position preview out on the outside linebackers, and you didn't know exactly sure what was going to happen with Vick Beasley. So I've pressed Pauls on that and now I can get those
rolling again. So a combination of the interviews I've done, the previews that I have, you know, these video conference calls at four guys on today that I may able to use content off of that. There's some other things that I can do between now and then where I'm gonna make it to camp. I've got I've got enough stuff to get to access next week. What I'm most looking forward to doing, I think what fans are most looking forward to seeing these practice sports and hearing who's
looking good in camp and who's out there. And we're not gonna be to tell them who's running with the at nicol and who's running with the ones, but we can at least give them, you know, some insight on who looks good, what they're doing, you know, hopefully have some some highlights on Twitter, uh from you know, from practices, and just get football going again. But it has been, I mean, it still has been a flurry of activity as far as I'm concerned. Because in the NFL, there's
always something right about. There's always something going on, and you know, I try to keep doing my part to keep the website fresh, Mike, isn't it Isn't it ridiculous that there is no access to football for us right now? We can't go to these practices, these walk throughs and things. Jim Wyatt is still making us look bad, like this is unbelievable. Out Jim Wyatt's grinding, I'm in a bubble bath somewhere. That's not true. You've been to the facility.
I know you have. I have been to the facility and it was the greatest feeling. You got to tape an interview, right I did tape an interview, and I'm very excited about it, and it's amazing what they've been able to do with the studio to get it set up so that everybody is still safe, but we can have interactions with people via video. It's very star Trek the whole thing. But it felt really really good to be back in the studio and be back in the facility. Mike,
I called you all emotional. Well, I felt that way too. I was there for two days and got a chance to start doing some interviews with players. They're not in the same room with us. It's gonna look very I think it's been described as Scott van Peltish. Yeah, how he does his interviews where he talks to somebody on the screen. That's how we're gonna have to do it, you know. And and the setups from I mean, we will continue to have to do some things from home.
I think it's going to continue all year. But what we know for the three of us is we are gonna get to watch ball practice one week from today. I know it's coming. I can. I can hear the sounds and smell the grass, and it makes me very happy. The question is can Dave McGinnis socially distanced at practice. Absolutely not. I'll put twenty bucks on the fact that coach Max whatever tracking beeper is going off within sixty seconds,
is being open. It's definitely gonna be a different season, I mean, because as you mentioned, the interviews that you guys are doing, and the fact that you know the locker room's not going to be open to reporters all season.
You know, it kind of remains to be seen whether anyone will be President Mike Rabel's press conferences, but I anticipate the majority of those in video conference call and after games, you know, I you know, I think the league's still working through the process of how that's going to be handled. I think you'll still maybe see Mike Rabel behind the podium post game, and we'll see whether players are there, you know, NC double a style behind
the desk, or whether they're gonna be all zoom. But it's gonna be a different year covering this team, you know, for all of us. Let me ask you a question, Jim, because and Amy, I want you to comment on this too, because I know you're a big college football fan. So sixty nine NFL players opted out. I was not surprised by that in the least. I thought that that probably sounded about right. Are you surprised, Jim and a lot of these college players choosing to opt out? I'm not.
I mean, I actually thought the number would maybe be higher in the NFL than ended up being. Yeah, you know, the college players. I kind of had gotten a sense in talking to some people, you know, in the last couple of weeks, that this was coming and if football doesn't go, I mean, I know, it's a lot of these conferences are now talking about going to the spring you know, I'm keeping my fingers crossed that, you know, the SEC and these Power five conferences will be able
to play in the fall. But if the conferences or football by some reason had to get moved to the spring, use I think, you know, floodgates would open up with everyone to claim for the draft and not come back
for their final season. So some of these other players are going to see the moves that these guys are making and have to start thinking themselves about, you know, does it make sense for me to come back, you know, for one more year with so many concerns with COVID, and is it smarter for me to get ready for the draft. And I'm just curious to see what those numbers look like as we move forward here in August.
Oh gosh, it's already so hard for players, especially players who are having some success at the college level, to decide, Okay, when do I declare if that's something that looks like I'm kind of eligible for I could have some success there, when do I walk away? Do I stay? I want to get that extra experience, But could I get hurt? Will my I guess stock rise or fall in making
that choice? And now these poor kids also have this virus that I could get sick, my teammates could get sick, and then the season's over, I've lost tape then, Like, there's all these different things that these kids have to think about for them and their families, and I wouldn't want to be them for the world. I wouldn't want to be going to college myself right now, just as a regular person who can't do anything like that's challenging. So making some sort of an athletic decision that could
impact your career for years to come. Who I wouldn't wish it on anybody. These kids are in a tough spot. Some of the guys who have already declared that they are going to opt out are players who, according to the experts, that the three of us rely on our first round picks. You know, that's a that's a big part of this right now is you've got some folks who,
I mean, these are these are big name players. Greg Russo from Miamia, Florida, one of the best edge rushers, a six seven guy with incredible length, and I mean Bateman from Minnesota, really good looking receiver who can do a lot of things. Certainly gotten everybody's attention. You know who's screaming right now, Agents of kids who are opting out a year early because they now have to find places for these kids to work out for a year. They've got to find lodging for them with those trainers.
Usually they're paying for most, if not all of that, all of their living expenses and things like that, while these kids are trying to prep their bodies and make sure that they're in shape to go to the next level after taking a year off. If you're an agent, you better fire up that credit card because you've got to supply a lot of things for these kids. A year before they'd be needing places to stay in trainers and all of that. Anyway, now you've got to do
it for a full six months too. You've got It's for the OTP presented by Farm Bureau Health Plans. Get the home field advantage with healthcare coverage from Farm Bureau Health Plans. They've been protecting Tennessee and since nineteen forty seven.
Jim Wyatt, please tell everyone how they can follow you on social media at j Wyatt Sports on Twitter and Instagram, and in addition to my story has been on Tennessee Titans Dot com post them on Facebook as well, So you got a lot to write about it, and starting gonna have a lot to write about starting next week. Heyby Wells, how do people follow you on social media? Well, I'm at Titans Amy Amie on Twitter, Titans underscore Amie on Instagram. It's kind of a long story, but underscore
on Instagram. I locked myself out of the real Titans Amy. That's the story you did, I really did. I was trying to make a Titans Amy Instagram profile. I decided I didn't like something, so I tried to delete it and I was like, no, I can do that. So I tried to restart it and they were like no, that name has already been used. And I tried to contact them and be like no, it's me. I'm yeah no, So I had to get clever. So Titans underscore Amy
on Instagram. That's good stuff, good good stuff. Jim, Thanks for taking time with Amy and me for this edition of the OTP. We appreciate you always and love what you do at Tennessee Titans dot com. You do make us all look good and look bad. The hardest working man in show business Jim Watt Aby Wells I'm might Keith. Thanks for joining us for the o PT
